>>82847747
>has your genetic engineering idea actually been tried by anyone
Nope B^).
>do you know if itd work?
It should, in theory. The only hurdle is the water activity bit, but I'm convinced that the reason there aren't any known microbes that can handle water activities as low as you see in honey is because there aren't that many environments on Earth that have water activities that low and the ones that do aren't stable. If you had bacteria living and breeding in honey, for example, then they'd start turning all of the sugar into water and CO2 and the water activity would quickly shift. Then they'd also get competition.
>sounds like you know your shit, do you have a biology degree, or is this self taught?
I pretty much quit life in 8th grade and dropped out. Self-taught. I'm just a sperg with too much time.
>not sure, id have to look into it. ive tried having them adjusted, but they never feel right
I sadly have no advice or ideas on any of that, since I don't have glasses. Making your own frames seems like a bit of a hurdle.
>they look like spiderwebs, and the way everything moves around is really interesting
I'm pretty sure those are specifically cable bacteria, although the video doesn't say what specific species they are. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_bacteria
They not only form those webs but they also bridge the gap from the more anaerobic, stinky and sulfidic lower sediments to the upper sediments with oxygen.

Have you ever gotten really into researching anything before? Or just learning about something?